The case concerned an appeal against the High Court of Karnataka’s judgment, which upheld the conviction of the appellant, Geeta, under Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), albeit with a reduced sentence of three years imprisonment. The High Court maintained the Trial Court’s fine of Rs. 5,000/-. The incident occurred on 12.08.2008, when the deceased, Sarika, the daughter of Peeraji Narayankar, set herself on fire at around 10:00 p.m. and later died after receiving hospital treatment. Sarika had given a statement before her death. The dispute originated from persistent noise disturbances caused by the appellant’s household, which affected Sarika’s tuition classes for children. The appellant and her family allegedly abused Sarika, calling her a “bitch” and making derogatory remarks about her unmarried status. On the day of the incident, a fight ensued between the neighbours, during which Sarika’s mother was allegedly assaulted, and Sarika was verbally abused, causing her mental distress. Following this, Sarika poured five litres of oil on herself and ignited it. While the Investigating Officer had charged five individuals, including Geeta, the Trial Court acquitted four of the accused (Raju S/o Sidram Indikar, Mala D/o Narayan Sindagi, Meena W/o Lokesh Agasar, and Suhasini D/o Narayan Sindagi) of all offences, including those under Section 306 IPC and the SC/ST Act. The appellant, Geeta, was acquitted of the offence under Section 3(2)(v) of the SC/ST Act but convicted under Section 306 IPC.
Law Involved:
Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC): Abetment of suicide.
Section 3(2)(v) of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 (SC/ST Act).
The Supreme Court referred to previous judgments such as Madan Mohan Singh Vs. State of Gujarat and Another and M. Mohan Vs. State to define and interpret the meaning of ‘instigation’ for the purpose of abetment of suicide. These cases established that ‘instigation’ implies actively provoking, inciting, or encouraging a person to commit suicide, and requires a clear intent to do so.
Reasoning:
- Lack of Intent to Instigate Suicide: The Supreme Court noted that while the appellant might have irritated or annoyed the deceased with words, the Trial Court found no intention on the appellant’s part to provoke the deceased to commit suicide. The Court further concluded that the appellant’s actions did not constitute instigation, provocation, urging, or encouragement to commit suicide.
- No Overt Act by Co-accused: The evidence did not reveal any specific overt act by the other four accused that contributed to the incident, leading to their acquittal.
- High Court’s Findings on Victim’s State of Mind: The High Court had observed that there was a minor fight that escalated over six months and that the victim, an educated private teacher, could not withstand constant harassment, leading her to commit suicide. However, it also noted that the case for harassment based on the victim’s caste was not supported by neighbours.
- Definition of ‘Abetment’: The Supreme Court emphasised that a conviction under Section 306 IPC requires a specific mens rea (guilty mind) to instigate the deceased to commit suicide. It referenced established legal principles that “casual” and “quarrelsome” words, without a serious intent to provoke suicide, do not amount to instigation.
- Absence of Proximate Link: The Court concluded that the quarrels and abuses, though regrettable, were not sufficiently proximate to the act of suicide to establish instigation. These were considered part of everyday life, and there was no evidence that the appellant intended to push the deceased to take her own life.
- Acquittal on SC/ST Act: The appellant had already been acquitted of the offence under the SC/ST Act, and the Court found no reason to overturn this.
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, thereby overturning and impugning the judgment of the High Court of Karnataka. The appellant’s conviction under Section 306 of the Indian Penal Code was set aside, meaning she was found not guilty of abetting suicide. The appellant was discharged from her bail bonds.
Geeta Vs The State of Karnataka
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1089: (DoJ 09-09-2025)




